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2—THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 45,000 Jobs Open For This Summer A directory with details of 45,000 summer Jobs offered by resorts and camps Is avaUable to students for $3 from the Na¬ tional Directory Service, Dept. CA, Box 32065, CtoctonaU, Ohio 45232. The pay ranges from $80 a Jobs avaUable are for waiters, waitresses, maids, cooks, dish¬ washers and otoer kitchen help. Camp Jobs to arts and crafts, What's Happening The Doily | Published five days a week *x- I periods by toe Fresno State College ASsocUtlon. Mall sub- I acrlptlons $1 a **me*ter, $15 a year. Editorial office Busi¬ ness 235, telephone 222-5161, Ext. 441, 444, 448. Business I offlc*. Agriculture 220, tele¬ phone 222-5161, oit. 256. EDITOR Mary Lou Fleming MANAGING EDITOR Carole Sarklslan SPORTS EDITOR MIVo Ryan PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Gary Daloyan ADVERTISING MANAGER CIRCULATION Peter M. BeUetto Bob Falk DAY EDITORS Dennis McCarthy Kathy Kir sen Bob Tap la Tina Arnopole Dottle Petrlck SILVER OPINIOf HON Is to Its last week. Applica¬ tions are avaUable to the Student President's Office untU Friday. CHINESE STUDENT CLUB will meet Thursday In Business 100. The club wUl sponsor a dance, a real "freak out* on Apr. 1 called 'Bacchanalia.* PSYCHOLOGY CLUB meets Thursday at 7:30 p.m. In Educa¬ tion Psychology 219. Dr. Ernest Moerk, a member of the psy¬ chology faculty, wUl speak on "German Psychology Today.* CALIFORNIA COLLEGE RE¬ PUBLICANS wUl meet Thursday in Social Science 201 at 1 p.m. OMICRON SIGMA PI. home Economics club, wUl hold a spring dinner Apr. 4 at 6:30 p.m. In toe faculty dining room. Reserva¬ tions for the $1.85 dinner can "be made with Mrs. Olson to Art- Home Economics 102 by Friday. FRESNO COMMUNITY THEA¬ TRE Is presenting 'The Wall,* by Emmy award winner MUlard Lmpell. Based on the novel by John Hersey, The Wall Is a people subjugated In wartime by the Nazi tyrant. Students may the Apr. 4 performance only upon presentaUon of a student body card. YOUNG PEOPLE'S CONCERTS. sponsored by the Fresno Phil¬ harmonic Association will be presented at the Convention Cen- ,t 9:30 a t 11 WORLD GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY film, 'Bavaria,* will be shown at the Convention Center Theater, HBE® FOR SALE-'64 VW lowmUeage, clean - $1250. Phone on campus Ext. 519; after 6:00, 255-5091. FOR SALE-1960 Ford Galaxle, New Tires, Good Condition, 4- Door, Radio/Heater. $495 or best cash offer. Call: 222-2171. MALE & FEMALE VISALIA CALIFORNIA LIBERAL ARTS GRADUATE POSITION OPEN FOR SOCIAL SERVICE WORKERS SALARY RANGE $466-556 ADVANCEMENT BY COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION 3 WEEKS ANNUAL VACATION ENTRY EXAMINATION BY APPOINTMENT WRITE OR CALL PERSONNEL DEPT. COURTHOUSE VISALIA, CALIFORNIA (209 732-5511) MUNTZ AUTO STEREO *39*5 PIUS $5.00 INSTAUATI0N . . . CHOOSE FROM . . . over 2,000 Albums 4 and 8 track. In Inventory. If we don't have your favorite — OPEN 6 DAYS A WK. TO 6 PM - LINIBAUOH'S - HARRISON Auto Air Cond. Co. PH. 268-4424 2014 E. MeKINLEY SAW tfXATIOM rot v TUIJ Candidates Say ICC Needs Work (Continued from Pag* 1) velop,* said Case. 1 feel that we must give It more to offer and establish an active program that will cause clubs to want to be a Tusan agreed that Inter-Club Council needs more responslbU- lty. «If it remains as it is, there said. More speclflcaUy, Goodwin oroooaes that Inter-Club CouncU •assume toe responsibilities for such functions as dances, rallies, pep girls, and the like, leaving the atters such as budgetary allo- Commentlng further about the udent Senate, Goodwin said, n its first year the Student Sen- e has vindicated toe new con- authority and has spent much of Its time settling procedural questions.* Tusan has also expressed sat¬ isfaction with the Student Senate ■to, Tusan feels that the Student Senate could transfer some of Its items of business to other groups. The solution to a better Student Senate may He In having closer presidential contact wlto the group 'to form common objec¬ tives,* according to Case. 'The •The Senate ha* worked w*U,* according to Ramirez. Ha has proposed no changes in structure for the group. Apathy and student government have frequenUy been linked at FSC, and several of toe candi¬ dates have offered explanations for this situation. ■Apathy is not an innate re¬ action ot Fresno State students, but a learned response,' said Goodwin. "In the past, student government has not been an ac¬ tive, effective force on campu*,. and students have been limited to their opportunities for meaning¬ ful Involvement to deterralng ba- *Meek acceptance of tola lack of participation has in turn fos¬ tered a strongly paternalistic at¬ titude on the part of toe adminis¬ tration,' he said. Agreeing that there Is apathy in student government, Case be¬ lieves It "could be corrected by such totogs as newsletters and better public relations. We must cause students to identify with our student government by making! something that they would want to identify with," he explained. Student belief that 'student government was to the hands of a small, closed group of atu- apathy offered by Tusan. "I In¬ tend to open the doors of govern¬ ment to any qualified person,' Partridge Will Visit Campus Dr. E. D. Partridge, president of toe Near East Foundation, wUl be on campus Friday to review the work of the Fresno State College International Institute of Housing Technology. Dr. Harold E. Walker, FSC ex- program concerns the develop- A DYNAMIC LEADS ON CAMPUS COMMITTEE TO ELECT TUSAN Picasso Copies In FSC Exhibit A yes-and-then-agaln-no art exhibit 1* curraotly under way Id Art-Horn* Economic* 208. it wUl run until Apr. 6. Th* positive-negativesituation arise* from to* fact that tho dis¬ played work* are from designs of Picasso'* by unknown artists. A* explained by art Instructor Thomas McDougaU, they are merely copies from basic plans laid out by to* 'modern master.* In an effort to assist to* nearly bankrupt town of Vallourls, France, Picasso created the basic designs for toe various ceramic* and lithographs that ar* being shown. The places aratoen produced in quantity and sold by the artisans of Vallourls. Although copies, many of the work* captur* tho prlmlUve style of genuine Picasso artistry. In a colored Utoograph on li¬ noleum UUed 'Carnival King* subdued color* and a primitive style tptly capture the Picasso uniqueness in art. McDougaU, who to in charge of to* exhibit, said toe fact that the pieces are all copies has caused of to* visitors. He admitted It was somewhat disappointing that all the pieces are coplea. But, the 'flavor of Picasso* is still evi¬ dent In much of toe work. The works on display are for sale and range in price from $20 to $500. There are 39 pieces to the show. Ness Approves Joint Committee President Frederic W. Ness has approved two recommenda¬ tions concerning toe future oper¬ ation of two subcommittees of the Student Affairs Committee. One of the recommendations was that toe Student Life Com¬ mittee be retained as a recom¬ mending body of the Student Af¬ fairs Committee. The other recommendation called for abolishing both toe Student Health and Student Hous¬ ing Committees and replacing them with a Joint Student Health and Housing Committee as a rec¬ ommending body to the Student Affairs Committee. It was also requested that speclficaUons be made stipulating that toe body be CHEVRON SERVICE •^ Accessories -**r Lubrication BLUE CHIP STAMPS 4797 E. Clinton Ol Cheitnut FRESNO, CALIF. required to meet at least three times a year. were first presented to the Ex¬ ecuUve Committee of toe Aca¬ demic Senate at Its Mar. 15 meet¬ ing. By a 6 to 5 margin, the ExecuUve Committee forwarded the matters to Dr. Ness. Dr. Jose Elgorrlaga, chairman of the Student Affairs Committee, said at toe Mar. 15 meeting that toe committee (Student Affairs Committee) had voted to abolish toe health committee because It had failed to function adequately. He said the committee met Ir¬ regularly and that It dealt more wlto budgetary matters than wlto matters of health. Dr. Marvin S.Schwartz,direc¬ tor of health services, told toe Executive Committee that abol¬ ishing the health committee might have "grave consequences.. He said that merging the two committees would make the Job of the Joint committee more cum¬ bersome and expressed fear that health matters might be relegated to a posiUon of secondary lmpor- Nuremberg To Be Topic Of Meeting and Russian ob¬ jectives at Nuremberg wUl be discussed ai a Fresno State Col¬ lege History Club meeting to¬ night at 7:30 In the Faculty Dining Davidson Joins Nuremberg Meet Eugene Davidson, president of the Foundation For Foreign Af¬ fairs, wiU replace Hajo Holborn to toe Nuremberg Trial* Sym¬ posium April 0, 7, and 8. Holborn was forced to withdraw because of Ul health. Davidson is to* author of to* recently published book on Nuremberg, THE TRIAL OF THE GERMANS. The 'Why Nurem¬ berg' program is sponsored by the History Club. Dr. Hubert Phillips, professor Donald Senese, assistant pro¬ fessor of history, wUl speak. Dr. PbUllps was an observer at to* Nuremberg trials to 1945. Senese was an exchange student at the University of Moscow dur- •We wUl try to establish Just dent. The film'Trial at Nuremberg. wiU be shown. The movie shows excerpts of the actual trials. This is the last In a series of history club meetings planned to provide background material tor the Nuremberg War Crime* Trials Seminar, which begins Stanberry said all faculty and students are invited to" attend the meeting. Talk Teams Take Trophies The Fresno State CoUege For- onslcs Squad won seven award* in th* Northern and Southern California championships hero during Easter break. Fresno Staters won th*award* at El Camlno Junior CoUege and San Francisco Stat* CoUege. In ill, 16 FSC forensic* mem¬ bers participated In to* meets. Ron Capps and Ann Wallace were among the southern tltutsts at El Camlno. Capps waa toe only students to earn a certificate of superior (upper division) and a first plac* in Lincoln-Douglas Debate. Miss Wallace won a cer¬ tificate of excellence to lower division interpretation. Pat Prewltt carried top honors In upper division wlto a certifi¬ cate of excellence while Brian Whit* earned a si Board Accepts Stadium Bid Food to go. __ Open 4 p.m.-3 a.m. at I 530 N. Blackstone IK (off Belmont) Ad 7-7054 DUAL EXHAUST *29°° GLASS PAC 'r '39 00 VOLCANIC CINDER PACK (LIFETIME GUARANTEE) FOR ALL CARS VALLEY MUFFLER SERVICE 222-304* (Continued from Page 1) Disapproved toe summer ses¬ sion acUvlUes budget pending further study and requests for Approved In principle an ap¬ propriation of $500 for toe sum¬ mer theater production of 'Beg¬ gars Opera,' on the condition that summer session students be ad¬ mitted free of charge; Called for tt budget request for the summer tutorials programs within two weeks; Appointed a board budget com¬ mittee membership ot MUe Case and Mike Cochrane, senators; Dr. Francl* WU*y, faculty; Asso¬ ciate Dean of Students Activities Gordon WUson tad Earle L. Bas¬ set, director of related educa¬ tional activities, administration. Case waa appointed of toe committee. TINT" LET US I 111 I YOUR AUTO GLASS FOR ONLY $19.95 SUN PROTECTIVE GLASS TINTING CO. 1329 BLACKSTONE Anita June* waa awarded a certificate of excellence In lower division oratory. The next tournament wUl be bald Mar. 31-Apr. 1. Seminar To Aid Learning Process A three-part program to Im¬ prove children's learning oppor¬ tunities by closing the gap be¬ tween home and school wUl be explained and demonstrated Friday from 1-5 p.m. In the Arena Theatre. Its purpose la to facilitate parents, teacher* and children In learning to work cooperatively and effectively to the many ac- tlvlUes which bring them to¬ gether. BarbyJon tor . Hallmark Cards . Gifts . Party SuppUes Jon. (Ufj Next to Bank of America
Object Description
Title | 1967_03 The Daily Collegian March 1967 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1967 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | March 30, 1967 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1967 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | 2—THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 45,000 Jobs Open For This Summer A directory with details of 45,000 summer Jobs offered by resorts and camps Is avaUable to students for $3 from the Na¬ tional Directory Service, Dept. CA, Box 32065, CtoctonaU, Ohio 45232. The pay ranges from $80 a Jobs avaUable are for waiters, waitresses, maids, cooks, dish¬ washers and otoer kitchen help. Camp Jobs to arts and crafts, What's Happening The Doily | Published five days a week *x- I periods by toe Fresno State College ASsocUtlon. Mall sub- I acrlptlons $1 a **me*ter, $15 a year. Editorial office Busi¬ ness 235, telephone 222-5161, Ext. 441, 444, 448. Business I offlc*. Agriculture 220, tele¬ phone 222-5161, oit. 256. EDITOR Mary Lou Fleming MANAGING EDITOR Carole Sarklslan SPORTS EDITOR MIVo Ryan PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Gary Daloyan ADVERTISING MANAGER CIRCULATION Peter M. BeUetto Bob Falk DAY EDITORS Dennis McCarthy Kathy Kir sen Bob Tap la Tina Arnopole Dottle Petrlck SILVER OPINIOf HON Is to Its last week. Applica¬ tions are avaUable to the Student President's Office untU Friday. CHINESE STUDENT CLUB will meet Thursday In Business 100. The club wUl sponsor a dance, a real "freak out* on Apr. 1 called 'Bacchanalia.* PSYCHOLOGY CLUB meets Thursday at 7:30 p.m. In Educa¬ tion Psychology 219. Dr. Ernest Moerk, a member of the psy¬ chology faculty, wUl speak on "German Psychology Today.* CALIFORNIA COLLEGE RE¬ PUBLICANS wUl meet Thursday in Social Science 201 at 1 p.m. OMICRON SIGMA PI. home Economics club, wUl hold a spring dinner Apr. 4 at 6:30 p.m. In toe faculty dining room. Reserva¬ tions for the $1.85 dinner can "be made with Mrs. Olson to Art- Home Economics 102 by Friday. FRESNO COMMUNITY THEA¬ TRE Is presenting 'The Wall,* by Emmy award winner MUlard Lmpell. Based on the novel by John Hersey, The Wall Is a people subjugated In wartime by the Nazi tyrant. Students may the Apr. 4 performance only upon presentaUon of a student body card. YOUNG PEOPLE'S CONCERTS. sponsored by the Fresno Phil¬ harmonic Association will be presented at the Convention Cen- ,t 9:30 a t 11 WORLD GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY film, 'Bavaria,* will be shown at the Convention Center Theater, HBE® FOR SALE-'64 VW lowmUeage, clean - $1250. Phone on campus Ext. 519; after 6:00, 255-5091. FOR SALE-1960 Ford Galaxle, New Tires, Good Condition, 4- Door, Radio/Heater. $495 or best cash offer. Call: 222-2171. MALE & FEMALE VISALIA CALIFORNIA LIBERAL ARTS GRADUATE POSITION OPEN FOR SOCIAL SERVICE WORKERS SALARY RANGE $466-556 ADVANCEMENT BY COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION 3 WEEKS ANNUAL VACATION ENTRY EXAMINATION BY APPOINTMENT WRITE OR CALL PERSONNEL DEPT. COURTHOUSE VISALIA, CALIFORNIA (209 732-5511) MUNTZ AUTO STEREO *39*5 PIUS $5.00 INSTAUATI0N . . . CHOOSE FROM . . . over 2,000 Albums 4 and 8 track. In Inventory. If we don't have your favorite — OPEN 6 DAYS A WK. TO 6 PM - LINIBAUOH'S - HARRISON Auto Air Cond. Co. PH. 268-4424 2014 E. MeKINLEY SAW tfXATIOM rot v TUIJ Candidates Say ICC Needs Work (Continued from Pag* 1) velop,* said Case. 1 feel that we must give It more to offer and establish an active program that will cause clubs to want to be a Tusan agreed that Inter-Club Council needs more responslbU- lty. «If it remains as it is, there said. More speclflcaUy, Goodwin oroooaes that Inter-Club CouncU •assume toe responsibilities for such functions as dances, rallies, pep girls, and the like, leaving the atters such as budgetary allo- Commentlng further about the udent Senate, Goodwin said, n its first year the Student Sen- e has vindicated toe new con- authority and has spent much of Its time settling procedural questions.* Tusan has also expressed sat¬ isfaction with the Student Senate ■to, Tusan feels that the Student Senate could transfer some of Its items of business to other groups. The solution to a better Student Senate may He In having closer presidential contact wlto the group 'to form common objec¬ tives,* according to Case. 'The •The Senate ha* worked w*U,* according to Ramirez. Ha has proposed no changes in structure for the group. Apathy and student government have frequenUy been linked at FSC, and several of toe candi¬ dates have offered explanations for this situation. ■Apathy is not an innate re¬ action ot Fresno State students, but a learned response,' said Goodwin. "In the past, student government has not been an ac¬ tive, effective force on campu*,. and students have been limited to their opportunities for meaning¬ ful Involvement to deterralng ba- *Meek acceptance of tola lack of participation has in turn fos¬ tered a strongly paternalistic at¬ titude on the part of toe adminis¬ tration,' he said. Agreeing that there Is apathy in student government, Case be¬ lieves It "could be corrected by such totogs as newsletters and better public relations. We must cause students to identify with our student government by making! something that they would want to identify with," he explained. Student belief that 'student government was to the hands of a small, closed group of atu- apathy offered by Tusan. "I In¬ tend to open the doors of govern¬ ment to any qualified person,' Partridge Will Visit Campus Dr. E. D. Partridge, president of toe Near East Foundation, wUl be on campus Friday to review the work of the Fresno State College International Institute of Housing Technology. Dr. Harold E. Walker, FSC ex- program concerns the develop- A DYNAMIC LEADS ON CAMPUS COMMITTEE TO ELECT TUSAN Picasso Copies In FSC Exhibit A yes-and-then-agaln-no art exhibit 1* curraotly under way Id Art-Horn* Economic* 208. it wUl run until Apr. 6. Th* positive-negativesituation arise* from to* fact that tho dis¬ played work* are from designs of Picasso'* by unknown artists. A* explained by art Instructor Thomas McDougaU, they are merely copies from basic plans laid out by to* 'modern master.* In an effort to assist to* nearly bankrupt town of Vallourls, France, Picasso created the basic designs for toe various ceramic* and lithographs that ar* being shown. The places aratoen produced in quantity and sold by the artisans of Vallourls. Although copies, many of the work* captur* tho prlmlUve style of genuine Picasso artistry. In a colored Utoograph on li¬ noleum UUed 'Carnival King* subdued color* and a primitive style tptly capture the Picasso uniqueness in art. McDougaU, who to in charge of to* exhibit, said toe fact that the pieces are all copies has caused of to* visitors. He admitted It was somewhat disappointing that all the pieces are coplea. But, the 'flavor of Picasso* is still evi¬ dent In much of toe work. The works on display are for sale and range in price from $20 to $500. There are 39 pieces to the show. Ness Approves Joint Committee President Frederic W. Ness has approved two recommenda¬ tions concerning toe future oper¬ ation of two subcommittees of the Student Affairs Committee. One of the recommendations was that toe Student Life Com¬ mittee be retained as a recom¬ mending body of the Student Af¬ fairs Committee. The other recommendation called for abolishing both toe Student Health and Student Hous¬ ing Committees and replacing them with a Joint Student Health and Housing Committee as a rec¬ ommending body to the Student Affairs Committee. It was also requested that speclficaUons be made stipulating that toe body be CHEVRON SERVICE •^ Accessories -**r Lubrication BLUE CHIP STAMPS 4797 E. Clinton Ol Cheitnut FRESNO, CALIF. required to meet at least three times a year. were first presented to the Ex¬ ecuUve Committee of toe Aca¬ demic Senate at Its Mar. 15 meet¬ ing. By a 6 to 5 margin, the ExecuUve Committee forwarded the matters to Dr. Ness. Dr. Jose Elgorrlaga, chairman of the Student Affairs Committee, said at toe Mar. 15 meeting that toe committee (Student Affairs Committee) had voted to abolish toe health committee because It had failed to function adequately. He said the committee met Ir¬ regularly and that It dealt more wlto budgetary matters than wlto matters of health. Dr. Marvin S.Schwartz,direc¬ tor of health services, told toe Executive Committee that abol¬ ishing the health committee might have "grave consequences.. He said that merging the two committees would make the Job of the Joint committee more cum¬ bersome and expressed fear that health matters might be relegated to a posiUon of secondary lmpor- Nuremberg To Be Topic Of Meeting and Russian ob¬ jectives at Nuremberg wUl be discussed ai a Fresno State Col¬ lege History Club meeting to¬ night at 7:30 In the Faculty Dining Davidson Joins Nuremberg Meet Eugene Davidson, president of the Foundation For Foreign Af¬ fairs, wiU replace Hajo Holborn to toe Nuremberg Trial* Sym¬ posium April 0, 7, and 8. Holborn was forced to withdraw because of Ul health. Davidson is to* author of to* recently published book on Nuremberg, THE TRIAL OF THE GERMANS. The 'Why Nurem¬ berg' program is sponsored by the History Club. Dr. Hubert Phillips, professor Donald Senese, assistant pro¬ fessor of history, wUl speak. Dr. PbUllps was an observer at to* Nuremberg trials to 1945. Senese was an exchange student at the University of Moscow dur- •We wUl try to establish Just dent. The film'Trial at Nuremberg. wiU be shown. The movie shows excerpts of the actual trials. This is the last In a series of history club meetings planned to provide background material tor the Nuremberg War Crime* Trials Seminar, which begins Stanberry said all faculty and students are invited to" attend the meeting. Talk Teams Take Trophies The Fresno State CoUege For- onslcs Squad won seven award* in th* Northern and Southern California championships hero during Easter break. Fresno Staters won th*award* at El Camlno Junior CoUege and San Francisco Stat* CoUege. In ill, 16 FSC forensic* mem¬ bers participated In to* meets. Ron Capps and Ann Wallace were among the southern tltutsts at El Camlno. Capps waa toe only students to earn a certificate of superior (upper division) and a first plac* in Lincoln-Douglas Debate. Miss Wallace won a cer¬ tificate of excellence to lower division interpretation. Pat Prewltt carried top honors In upper division wlto a certifi¬ cate of excellence while Brian Whit* earned a si Board Accepts Stadium Bid Food to go. __ Open 4 p.m.-3 a.m. at I 530 N. Blackstone IK (off Belmont) Ad 7-7054 DUAL EXHAUST *29°° GLASS PAC 'r '39 00 VOLCANIC CINDER PACK (LIFETIME GUARANTEE) FOR ALL CARS VALLEY MUFFLER SERVICE 222-304* (Continued from Page 1) Disapproved toe summer ses¬ sion acUvlUes budget pending further study and requests for Approved In principle an ap¬ propriation of $500 for toe sum¬ mer theater production of 'Beg¬ gars Opera,' on the condition that summer session students be ad¬ mitted free of charge; Called for tt budget request for the summer tutorials programs within two weeks; Appointed a board budget com¬ mittee membership ot MUe Case and Mike Cochrane, senators; Dr. Francl* WU*y, faculty; Asso¬ ciate Dean of Students Activities Gordon WUson tad Earle L. Bas¬ set, director of related educa¬ tional activities, administration. Case waa appointed of toe committee. TINT" LET US I 111 I YOUR AUTO GLASS FOR ONLY $19.95 SUN PROTECTIVE GLASS TINTING CO. 1329 BLACKSTONE Anita June* waa awarded a certificate of excellence In lower division oratory. The next tournament wUl be bald Mar. 31-Apr. 1. Seminar To Aid Learning Process A three-part program to Im¬ prove children's learning oppor¬ tunities by closing the gap be¬ tween home and school wUl be explained and demonstrated Friday from 1-5 p.m. In the Arena Theatre. Its purpose la to facilitate parents, teacher* and children In learning to work cooperatively and effectively to the many ac- tlvlUes which bring them to¬ gether. BarbyJon tor . Hallmark Cards . Gifts . Party SuppUes Jon. (Ufj Next to Bank of America |